Maximum Kinetic Energy from a Physical Pendulum

AI Thread Summary
The discussion focuses on calculating the maximum kinetic energy of a uniform rod acting as a physical pendulum with a mass of 0.5 kg and a length of 0.75 m at an angular displacement of 5 degrees. The conservation of energy principle is applied, stating that maximum kinetic energy occurs when all potential energy is converted to kinetic energy. The center of mass is determined to be at L/2, leading to the formula for maximum kinetic energy as mg (l/2) sin(x). Participants clarify the use of sin(x) versus cos(x) in the calculations and emphasize the importance of visualizing the problem through diagrams to avoid confusion. The conversation highlights the need for careful interpretation of the pendulum's motion and the correct application of trigonometric functions in energy calculations.
xoxomae
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Homework Statement


Determine the maximum kinetic energy of a uniform rod of mass 0.5Kg and length 0.75 that has an angular displacement of 5 degrees.

Homework Equations


y = rsin (x) where x is the angular displacement

The Attempt at a Solution


Using conservation of energy ETotal = EMech + EPOTENTIAL

Kinetic energy is at a maximum when all potential energy is converted to kinetic energy

Centre of mass of of physical pendulum is equal to L/2

Therefore max kinetic energy = mg (l/2) sin (x)
= 0.0163417 J

I just have no idea if this is right
 
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xoxomae said:
1
Using conservation of energy ETotal = EMech + EPOTENTIAL
Did you mean to write EKinetic instead of EMech?

Kinetic energy is at a maximum when all potential energy is converted to kinetic energy

Centre of mass of of physical pendulum is equal to L/2

Therefore max kinetic energy = mg (l/2) sin (x)
Can you explain why you used a factor of sin(x) here? Be sure to draw a picture to help find the change in vertical height of the center of the rod.
 
I used a factor of sin (x) because the change in the y-axis * mg is equal to total potential energy
y = r sin (theta) when changing between polar and cartesian coordinates
Is this the wrong way to think about it?
 
First of all, I want to make sure I'm interpreting the question correctly. I assume from the title that you are dealing with a swinging physical pendulum. I am also assuming that the maximum angular displacement from equilibrium is 5 degrees. Is this correct?
 
Would I have to use cos (x) instead of sin (x)?

Umm yes that's the question :)
 
xoxomae said:
Would I have to use cos (x) instead of sin (x)?
It's not a matter of just replacing sin(x) by cos(x). Did you draw a picture?
 
Okay, so i drew a picture and realized that I made a mistake.

I got to
Change in x = l/2 * (1- cos(x))
 
Looks good. But you're using x for two different things!
 
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